Joey Ramone
(May 19, 1951 – April 15, 2001), born as Jeffrey Ross Hyman
, was a vocalist and songwriter best known for his work in the punk rock group the Ramones. Joey Ramone's image, voice and tenure as frontman of the Ramones made him a countercultural icon. [1]
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Biography
Early life
Joey grew up in
Forest Hills,
Queens in a
Jewish family.
[2] He and his future bandmates attended
Forest Hills High School.
During his youth, he was by general accounts something of an outcast and had a dysfunctional family life, which inspired the song "We're A Happy Family." His parents divorced in the early 1960s. His mother, Charlotte Lesher (1926-2007), encouraged an interest in music in both him and his brother Mitchell (a.k.a.
Mickey Leigh).
He was a fan of
The Beatles,
[3] The Who, and
The Stooges among other bands (particularly
oldies and the
Phil Spector-produced "
girl groups"). His hero was
Pete Townshend of The Who.
He took up drums at 13, playing throughout his teen years.
Rock & roll gave the teenaged Joey Ramone an escape from his parents' divorce and he began playing in glam-influenced bands in the early '70s. He co-founded the Ramones in 1974 with friends
John Cummings and
Douglas Colvin, upon which point all three adopted Ramone as their stage surname. Joey Ramone initially served as the group's drummer.
Dee Dee Ramone was the original vocalist. However, Dee Dee proved to be unsuited for the lead vocal position as he shredded his vocal cords after the first few songs recorded, so manager
Tommy Erdelyi (who adopted the name Tommy Ramone) suggested Joey switch to vocals and Tommy take over on drums.
Ramones
Joey was said to be the "heart and soul" of the
Ramones, and his favorite songs from their repertoire were often the ballads and love songs.
C.J. Ramone called him the "hippie of the group."
[4]
The Ramones were an American rock band often regarded as the first
punk rock group. Formed in
Forest Hills, Queens, New York, in 1974, all of the band members adopted stage names ending with "Ramone", though none of them were actually related. They performed 2,263 concerts, touring virtually nonstop for 22 years. In 1996, after a tour with the
Lollapalooza music festival, the band played their final show and then disbanded. A little more than eight years after the breakup, the band's three founding members - Joey, guitarist
Johnny Ramone, and bassist
Dee Dee Ramone — were dead.
The Ramones were a major influence on the punk rock movement both in the United States and Great Britain, though they achieved only minor commercial success. Their only record with enough U.S. sales to be certified gold was the compilation album
Ramones Mania
. Recognition of the band's importance built over the years, and they are now regularly represented in many assessments of all-time great rock music, such as the
Rolling Stone
lists of the 50 Greatest Artists of All Time and 25 Greatest Live Albums of All Time,
VH1's 100 Greatest Artists of Hard Rock, and Mojo's 100 Greatest Albums. In 2002, the Ramones were voted the second greatest rock and roll band ever in
Spin
, trailing only
The Beatles.
Other projects
In 1985, Joey joined Little
Steven Van Zandt's music-industry activist group
Artists United Against Apartheid which acted against the
Sun City resort in
South Africa. Joey and forty-nine other top recording artists, including
Bruce Springsteen,
U2,
Bob Dylan and
Run DMC, collaborated on the song "
Sun City" in which they pledged they would never perform at the resort.
In 1994, Joey appeared on the
Helen Love album
Love and Glitter, Hot Days and Music
singing the track "Punk Boy". Helen Love returned the favor, singing on Joey's song "
Mr. Punchy".
Hyman co-wrote and recorded the song "
Meatball Sandwich" with
Youth Gone Mad. For a short time before his death, he took the role of manager and producer for the punk rock group
The Independents.
[5]
His last recording as a vocalist was singing backup vocals on the CD
One Nation Under
by the Dine Navajo rock group
Blackfire. He appeared on two tracks, "What Do You See" and "Lying to Myself". The CD, released in 2002, won "Best Pop/Rock Album of the Year" at the 2002 Native American Music Awards.
[6]
Joey also produced the
Ronnie Spector album
She Talks to Rainbows
in 1999. It was critically acclaimed, but did not perform too well with the public and went virtually unnoticed. The title track was previously on the
Ramones' last studio album,
¡Adios Amigos!
.
Death
Joey Ramone died of
lymphoma at
New York-Presbyterian Hospital on April 15, 2001, after suffering from the illness for over seven years.
[7] This contributed to a fall he had in 2000 that ultimately proved to be fatal. Memorials followed from his fans and musicians he had influenced.
He was listening to the song "
In A Little While" by
U2 when he died.
[8] This was during U2's
Elevation Tour, and from that point on during shows
Bono would introduce the song as a tune that was originally about a lovestruck hangover but that Joey turned it into a gospel song.
[9]
His solo album
Don't Worry About Me
was released posthumously in 2002, and features the single "
What a Wonderful World", a cover of the
Louis Armstrong standard.
MTV News claimed: "With his trademark rose-colored shades, black leather jacket, shoulder-length hair, ripped jeans and alternately snarling and crooning, hiccoughing vocals, Joey was the iconic godfather of punk."
[10]
On November 30, 2003, a block of East 2nd Street in New York City was officially renamed Joey Ramone Place.
[11] It is the block where Hyman once lived with bandmate
Dee Dee Ramone, and is near the music club
CBGB, where the Ramones got their start. Hyman's birthday is celebrated annually by rock 'n' roll nightclubs, hosted in New York City by his brother and, until recently, his mother. Joey was buried in
Hillside Cemetery in
Lyndhurst, New Jersey.
[12]
In the year that Joey died (2001) the Ramones were named as inductees to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, prior to the actual ceremony held early the following year (2002).
Vocal style
Ramone's vocal style was unorthodox in that he had no formal training in an era where vocal proficiency was arguably the norm for most rock bands. His signature cracks, hiccups, snarls, crooning and youthful voice made his one of punk rock's most recognizable voices. Allmusic.com claims that "Joey Ramone's signature bleat was the voice of punk rock in America."
[13] As his vocals matured and deepened through his career, so did the Ramones' songwriting, leaving a notable difference from Joey's initial melodic and callow style—two notable tracks serving as examples are "
Somebody Put Something in My Drink" and "Mama's Boy".
Discography
For Ramones albums, see Ramones discography.
Solo
- Don't Worry About Me
– (2002)
EP
- In a Family Way
– Sibling Rivalry (1994)
- Ramones: Leathers from New York
– The Ramones and Joey Ramone (solo) (1997)
- Christmas Spirit...In My House
– (2002)
Singles
- "I Got You Babe" - (1982) (A duet with Holly Beth Vincent)
- "What a Wonderful World" - (2002)
Notes and references
- http://allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:h9fyxqtgldde~T1
- Powers, Ann. "Joey Ramone, Punk's Influential Yelper, Dies at 49", ''The New York Times'', April 16, 2001. Accessed June 2, 2009. "Born Jeffrey Hyman in Forest Hills, Queens, Mr. Ramone grew up a sensitive outcast in a bohemian family."
- BBC News | MUSIC | The musical misfits
- MyRamones
- Independents band bio
- Blackfire.net
- http://www.joeyramone.com/news_08.html
- VH1 news
- Elevation 2001: Live from Boston
- MTV News obituary
- Officialramones.com
- Sometimes the Grave Is a Fine and Public Place
- Allmusic.com—Joey Ramone